Disciplines
Sappi invests for a sustainable future
Sappi’s Gratkorn Mill can look back on more than 400 hundred years of papermaking at the site, which nestles by the river Mur in a beautiful part of Austria near the country’s second city Graz –...
What more can the print industry do to draw in the next generation of talent?
Increasing efforts to find and train young people will close the skills gap and help to ensure print’s future is secure.
Accentuate the positive and have faith in your ability to succeed
Confidence is critical to the success of any business. But as with so many things in life there are the ‘nice to haves’ we have little influence over and ‘must haves’ we like to think we have absolute...
Dedicated to UK print
The Print Show launched in 2015 and has run every year since, with the unavoidable exceptions of Covid-blighted 2020 and 2021. It is now a well-established and popular fixture on the UK printing...
James Cropper reports positive start in trading update
James Cropper said it has made a positive start to the financial year in a trading update released today (4 September).
Customark continues acquisition-based growth streak
Acquisitive label printing firm Customark has continued a string of purchases with the acquisition of Charnwood Label Craft (CLC) in early August, and sister companies Kingsbury Screens and Industrial...
Activists vandalise Kite Packaging site for second time
Kite Packaging’s site in Kent has been damaged for a second time by activists from Palestine Action.
UK outdoor advertiser doubles billboard portfolio
UK outdoor advertising host 75Media has acquired 595 new roadside paper billboards, doubling its billboard portfolio and leapfrogging competitors to become the UK’s second-largest roadside billboard...
DS Smith updates on trading as IP deal remains on track
DS Smith has issued a trading update in respect of the period since 1 May 2024 while confirming that its “combination” with International Paper remains on track.
Insolvencies, departures, closures, and criminal activity – print’s toughest month
If our most-read listicle is anything to go by, then August must be in the running for print’s cruellest month in 2024 because, much like with the UK summer, sunshine was in short supply.